Fowler House (Bastrop, Texas) Explained

Fowler House
Coordinates:30.1153°N -97.3228°W
Locmap Relief:yes
Area:less than one acre
Built:1880
Added:December 22, 1978
Mpsub:Bastrop Historic and Architectural MRA
Refnum:78003321
Designated Other1:Texas
Designated Other1 Date:2008
Designated Other1 Number:15623
Designated Other1 Num Position:bottom

The Fowler House, also known as the Allen-Fowler House is a historic, two-story, modified L-plan house built in 1852 in Bastrop, Texas, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 22, 1978, and was designated a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark in 2008.

The house was built by Professor William J. Hancock of Aberdeen, Mississippi, in 1852 after he arrived in Bastrop to become headmaster at the Bastrop Academy, one of the leading schools in Texas at the time. The house was not only for his family and him, but also for student boarders.

In 1857, Bastrop Academy became Bastrop Military Institute, which trained young men for service during the Civil War. Colonel Robert Thomas Pritchard Allen replaced Hancock as headmaster and Allen and his wife Julia moved into the house. They continued to board cadets who attended the institute. Sam Houston, a hero of the Texas Revolution, was a frequent guest of the Allens while his sons attended the institute.

John Preston Fowler and Maud Maynard Fowler bought the property in 1876 and added Victorian detailing and a projecting bay window to the structure. Fowler became mayor of Bastrop, county attorney, and a Texas state senator.

[1]

[2]

The current owner of the house is Geoff Connor, who purchased the house in 2006.

See also

Notes and References

  1. none. Bastrop Historical and Architectural Multiple Resources Area. MPS from NPS in 27 pages. Also available from Texas and from NARA.
  2. none. National Register of Historic Places Registration: Fowler House . Marie Deacon Landon . Joe R. Wi111ams. Stan Klein . 1977 . . February 23, 2023. Includes photo from 1969.